Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Brigitte Wirth is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Brigitte Wirth.


European Spine Journal | 2012

Is a positive clinical outcome after exercise therapy for chronic non-specific low back pain contingent upon a corresponding improvement in the targeted aspect(s) of performance? A systematic review

F. Steiger; Brigitte Wirth; E.D. de Bruin; A. F. Mannion

IntroductionThe effect size for exercise therapy in the treatment of chronic non-specific low back pain (cLBP) is only modest. This review aims to analyse the specificity of the effect by examining the relationship between the changes in clinical outcome (pain, disability) and the changes in the targeted aspects of physical function (muscle strength, mobility, muscular endurance) after exercise therapy.Methods We searched for exercise therapy trials for cLBP published up to 15 April 2010 in Medline, Embase, Cochrane Library, Cinahl, and PEDro. Two independent reviewers selected studies according to the inclusion criteria. Data extraction: one author extracted the data of the articles.ResultsData synthesis: 16 studies with a total of 1,476 participants met the inclusion criteria. There was little evidence supporting a relationship between the changes in pain or physical function and the changes in performance for the following measures: mobility (no correlation in 9 studies, weak correlation in 1 study), trunk extension strength (7 and 2, respectively), trunk flexion strength (4 and 1, respectively) and back muscle endurance (7 and 0, respectively). Changes in disability showed no correlation with changes in mobility in three studies and a weak correlation in two; for strength, the numbers were four (no correlation) and two (weak correlation), respectively.ConclusionsThe findings do not support the notion that the treatment effects of exercise therapy in cLBP are directly attributable to changes in the musculoskeletal system. Future research aimed at increasing the effectiveness of exercise therapy in cLBP should explore the coincidental factors influencing symptom improvement.


BMC Musculoskeletal Disorders | 2014

Effects of proprioceptive exercises on pain and function in chronic neck- and low back pain rehabilitation: a systematic literature review

Michael A. McCaskey; Corina Schuster-Amft; Brigitte Wirth; Zorica Suica; Eling D. de Bruin

BackgroundProprioceptive training (PrT) is popularly applied as preventive or rehabilitative exercise method in various sports and rehabilitation settings. Its effect on pain and function is only poorly evaluated. The aim of this systematic review was to summarise and analyse the existing data on the effects of PrT on pain alleviation and functional restoration in patients with chronic (≥3 months) neck- or back pain.MethodsRelevant electronic databases were searched from their respective inception to February 2014. Randomised controlled trials comparing PrT with conventional therapies or inactive controls in patients with neck- or low back pain were included. Two review authors independently screened articles and assessed risk of bias (RoB). Data extraction was performed by the first author and crosschecked by a second author. Quality of findings was assessed and rated according to GRADE guidelines. Pain and functional status outcomes were extracted and synthesised qualitatively and quantitatively.ResultsIn total, 18 studies involving 1380 subjects described interventions related to PrT (years 1994–2013). 6 studies focussed on neck-, 12 on low back pain. Three main directions of PrT were identified: Discriminatory perceptive exercises with somatosensory stimuli to the back (pPrT, n = 2), multimodal exercises on labile surfaces (mPrT, n = 13), or joint repositioning exercise with head-eye coordination (rPrT, n = 3). Comparators entailed usual care, home based training, educational therapy, strengthening, stretching and endurance training, or inactive controls. Quality of studies was low and RoB was deemed moderate to high with a high prevalence of unclear sequence generation and group allocation (>60%). Low quality evidence suggests PrT may be more effective than not intervening at all. Low quality evidence suggests that PrT is no more effective than conventional physiotherapy. Low quality evidence suggests PrT is inferior to educational and behavioural approaches.ConclusionsThere are few relevant good quality studies on proprioceptive exercises. A descriptive summary of the evidence suggests that there is no consistent benefit in adding PrT to neck- and low back pain rehabilitation and functional restoration.


BMC Pediatrics | 2013

Spine day 2012: spinal pain in Swiss school children- epidemiology and risk factors

Brigitte Wirth; Christina Knecht; Kim Humphreys

BackgroundThe key to a better understanding of the immense problem of spinal pain seems to be to investigate its development in adolescents. Based on the data of Spine Day 2012 (an annual action day where Swiss school children were examined by chiropractors on a voluntary basis for back problems), the aim of the present study was to gain systematic epidemiologic data on adolescent spinal pain in Switzerland and to explore risk factors per gender and per spinal area.MethodData (questionnaires and physical examinations) of 836 school children were descriptively analyzed for prevalence, recurrence and severity of spinal pain. Of those, 434 data sets were included in risk factor analysis. Using logistic regression analysis, psycho-social parameters (presence of parental back pain, parental smoking, media consumption, type of school bag) and physical parameters (trunk symmetry, posture, mobility, coordination, BMI) were analyzed per gender and per spinal area.ResultsPrevalence of spinal pain was higher for female gender in all areas apart from the neck. With age, a steep increase in prevalence was observed for low back pain (LBP) and for multiple pain sites. The increasing impact of spinal pain on quality of life with age was reflected in an increase in recurrence, but not in severity of spinal pain. Besides age and gender, parental back pain (Odds ratio (OR)=3.26, p=0.011) and trunk asymmetry (OR=3.36, p=0.027) emerged as risk factors for spinal pain in girls. Parental smoking seemed to increase the risk for both genders (boys: OR=2.39, p=0.020; girls: OR=2.19, p=0.051). Risk factor analysis per spinal area resulted in trunk asymmetry as risk factor for LBP (OR=3.15, p=0.015), while parental smoking increased the risk for thoracic spinal pain (TSP) (OR=2.83, p=0.036) and neck pain (OR=2.23, p=0.038). The risk for TSP was further enhanced by a higher BMI (OR=1.15, p=0.027).ConclusionThis study supports the view of adolescent spinal pain as a bio-psycho-social problem that should be investigated per spinal area, age and gender. The role of trunk asymmetry and passive smoking as risk factors as well as the association between BMI and TSP should be further investigated, preferably in prospective studies.


Journal of Electromyography and Kinesiology | 2011

Acute effects of whole-body vibration on trunk muscles in young healthy adults

Brigitte Wirth; Stephan Zurfluh; Roland Müller

Little is known about the impact of whole body vibration (WBV) training on trunk muscles. Thus, this study investigated the acute effects of WBV on back and abdominal muscle activity. Twenty-five healthy subjects (24.7 ± 3.0 years, 17 men) conducted eight common static exercises for the back and abdominal muscles in a random order on a vibration platform, with and without vibration. Surface EMG was measured from back and abdominal muscles. Vibration-induced motion artefacts were removed from the EMG signal. Muscle activity with and without vibration was normalized to maximal voluntary contraction (MVC) and compared. The addition of vibration resulted in significant increases in muscle activity particularly in the exercises for the abdominal muscles of up to 7.2 ± 5.5% MVC (median ± semi-interquartile range). In the back muscles, the largest difference by adding vibration was 1.6 ± 1.4% MVC (median ± semi-interquartile range). The results of this study indicate a low to moderate increase in trunk muscle activation due to WBV. Presumably, this effect might depend on the distance from the corresponding muscle to the vibration platform and on how much the exercise position challenges body balance. However, the relevance of these findings has to be further investigated in training studies.


BMC Medical Research Methodology | 2012

Two assessments to evaluate imagery ability: translation, test-retest reliability and concurrent validity of the German KVIQ and Imaprax

Corina Schuster; Anina Lussi; Brigitte Wirth; Thierry Ettlin

BackgroundA combination of physical practice and motor imagery (MI) can improve motor function. It is essential to assess MI vividness in patients with sensorimotor impairments before implementing MI interventions. The studys aims were to translate the Canadian Kinaesthetic and Visual Imagery Questionnaire (KVIQ) and the French Imaprax, and to examine reliability and validity of the German versions.MethodsQuestionnaires were translated according to guidelines. With examiner’s help patients (diagnosis: stroke: subacute/chronic, brain tumour, Multiple Sclerosis, Parkinson’s disease) were tested twice within seven days (T0, T1). KVIQ-G: Patients were shown a movement by the examiner, before executing and imagining the movement. They rated vividness of the image and intensity of the sensations on a five-point Likert-scale. Imaprax required a 3-step procedure: imagination of one of six gestures; evaluation of gesture understanding, vividness, and imagery perspective. Questionnaire data were analysed overall and for each group. Reliability parameters were calculated: intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC), Cronbachs alpha, standard error of measurement, minimal detectable change. Validity parameters included Spearmans rank correlation coefficient and factor analysis of the KVIQ-G-20.ResultsPatients (N = 73, 28 females, age: 63 ± 13) showed the following at T0: KVIQ-G-20vis 41.7 ± 9, KVIQ-G-10vis 21.1 ± 5. ICC for KVIQ-G-20vis and KVIQ-G-10vis was 0.77; KVIQ-G-20kin 36.4 ± 12, KVIQ-G-10kin 18.3 ± 6. ICCs for KVIQ-G-20kin and KVIQ-G-10kin were 0.83/0.85; Imapraxvis 32.7 ± 4 and ICC 0.51. Internal consistency was estimated for KVIQ-G-20 αvis = 0.94/αkin = 0.92, KVIQ-G-10 αvis = 0.88/αkin = 0.96, Imaprax-G αvis = 0.70. Validity testing was performed with 19 of 73 patients, who chose an internal perspective: rs = 0.36 (p = 0.13). Factor analysis revealed two factors correlating with r = 0.36. Both explain 69.7% of total variance.ConclusionsKVIQ-G and Imaprax-G are reliable instruments to assess MI in patients with sensorimotor impairments confirmed by a KVIQ-G-factor analysis. KVIQ-G visual values were higher than kinaesthetic values. Patients with Multiple Sclerosis showed the lowest, subacute stroke patients the highest values. Hemiparetic patients scored lower in both KVIQ-G subscales on affected side compared to non-affected side. It is suggested to administer the Imaprax-G before the KVIQ-G to test patient’s ability to distinguish between external and internal MI perspective. Duration of both questionnaires lead to an educational effect. Imaprax validity testing should be repeated.


Journal of Electromyography and Kinesiology | 2010

Isometric back muscle endurance: An EMG study on the criterion validity of the Ito test

Roland Müller; Kurt Strässle; Brigitte Wirth

The validity of the Sorensen test as a measure for back muscle endurance is controversial due to a possible impact of hip extensor muscles. The aim of this study was to investigate the criterion validity of an alternative test (Ito test) compared to the Sorensen test. Both procedures were performed by 29 healthy subjects (11 women) for 5s and until exhaustion (randomized order). EMG activity was measured from 3 lumbar back and 3 hip extensor muscles. Muscular involvement in test positions was calculated as percentage of maximal voluntary contraction (MVC). Muscle fatigue was determined by the normalized regression coefficient of the median frequencies of the EMG power spectrum (NMF(slope)). Prediction of holding time by NMF(slope) values was investigated using regression analysis. In the test positions, the hamstring muscles were activated to a higher MVC percentage in the Sorensen than in the Ito test, while the iliocostalis muscle was less activated. Similarly, the iliocostalis (p=0.006) and the multifidi muscles (p=0.03) significantly contributed to predict holding time in the Ito test, whereas the multifidi muscles (p=0.001) and the semitendinosus muscle (p=0.046) did so in the Sorensen test. The results of this study indicate that the Ito test might present a valuable alternative for testing back muscle endurance in LBP patients.


Sportverletzung-sportschaden | 2011

Entwicklung und Evaluation einer deutschen Version des Lysholm-Scores zur Erfassung der Funktion nach einer Verletzung des vorderen Kreuzbands

Brigitte Wirth; F. Liffert; E. D. de Bruin

BACKGROUND The Lysholm score is a questionnaire that assesses knee function after conservatively or operatively treated anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries. Its original version is in English and consists of eight items (limping, support, locking, instability, pain, swelling, stair-climbing, squatting). The aim of this study was to translate the Lysholm score in the German language, to test discriminative validity and reliability of this German version and, thus, to provide a validated German version of the Lysholm score to be applied in further studies. METHODS The cross-cultural adaptation to the German language was performed according to recommended guidelines in the literature. Validity and reliability of the German version were tested in two patient groups in the acute (< 3 months post incident/operation; n = 12) and late rehabilitation phase after ACL injury (3 - 12 months post incident/operation, n = 16), respectively as well as in a control group without any knee problems (n = 22). The subjects filled in the questionnaire twice within three days. RESULTS With respect to validity, the control group (total score 96.8 ± 5.1 points) differed significantly from the total patient group (p < 0.001) as well as from the patient group in the acute (75.3 ± 16.8 points) (p < 0.001) and the late (82.7 ± 12.8 Punkte) (p < 0.001) rehabilitation phase, respectively. Test-retest reliability of the total Lysholm score was good for the total patient group (intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) = 0.82) as well as for the patients in the acute (ICC = 0.82) and in the late (ICC = 0.84) rehabilitation phase, respectively. The Cronbachs Alpha was 0.73. CONCLUSION The psychometric properties of the German version of the Lysholm score are comparable to the English version. It is a valid and reliable instrument for the objective assessment of rehabilitation outcome after ACL injury at least in the German speaking part of Switzerland. Based on these first results, its application for further research projects in all German speaking countries is recommended.


Sportverletzung-sportschaden | 2013

Entwicklung und Evaluation einer deutschen Version der Tegner Aktivitätsskala zur Erfassung der Funktion nach einer Verletzung des vorderen Kreuzbands

Brigitte Wirth; N. Meier; P. P. Koch; Jaap Swanenburg

BACKGROUND The aim of this study is to provide a valid and reliable German version of the Tegner activity scale (Tegner-G). The Tegner activity scale assesses on 11 levels the activity in sports (competitive and recreational) and work of patients with anterior cruciate ligament injuries. The English original version was elaborated in Sweden and contains sports that are unknown in German-speaking countries. METHODS The translation and adaptation was conducted in several steps according to the guidelines in the literature. The validity (discriminative validity and content validity) and (absolute and relative) reliability were determined in 46 patients after reconstruction of the anterior cruciate ligament and in 20 healthy subjects. The patients were divided into an acute group (< 3 months after operation; 11 men; 30.9 ± 8.3 years) and a chronic group (3 - 12 months after operation; 18 men; 31.3 ± 11.6 years). All subjects filled in the scale two times within 3 - 7 days. For the additional determination of the relation between activity and function, they also filled in the German version of the Lysholm score (Lysholm-G). RESULTS The three groups differed significantly from each other (Kruskal-Wallis test: χ2 = 27.95, p < 0.001; post hoc Mann-Whitney U tests: acute-chronic p < 0.001; acute-control p < 0.001; chronic-control p = 0.003). There was a floor effect in the acute patient group. The intraclass correlation coefficients indicated a high relative reliability (ICC2,1 > 0.9). The minimal detectable change was 1.4 points. The relation between activity (Tegner-G) and function (Lysholm-G) was stronger in the acute than in the chronic patient group (ρ = 0.77 and ρ = 0.60, respectively). CONCLUSION The psychometric properties of the Tegner-G are comparable to those of the English original version. The Tegner-G is thus valid and reliable for the German-speaking part of Switzerland. The application in other German-speaking countries probably requires adaptations for some of the sports included. The relation between activity and function changes depending on time since operation. This confirms that a comprehensive assessment of the outcome after an anterior cruciate ligament injury requires the separate assessment of both parameters.


Physiotherapy Theory and Practice | 2015

Patients’ and therapists’ perception of change following physiotherapy in an orthopedic hospital’s outpatient clinic

Jaap Swanenburg; Christina Gruber; Florian Brunner; Brigitte Wirth

Abstract Objective: The aims of this observational, prospective cohort study were to: assess the patients’ and therapists’ perception of change after physiotherapy in an orthopedic hospital’s outpatient clinic; relate these retrospective assessments to a serial assessment of pain; and study the influence of patient characteristics on the perceived change. Methods: 161 patients of the outpatient clinic participated. The main outcome measures were the patient global impression of change (PGIC) and the clinical global impression of change (CGIC) after physiotherapy. The visual analogue scale was used as serial assessment. Results: The PGIC indicated improvement in 128 patients (80%) and the CGIC in 117 patients (73%). The correlation between PGIC and CGIC was good (rS = 0.71, p < 0.001). The perceived change correlated little to baseline pain (PGIC: rS = 0.24, p = 0.004; CGIC: rS = 0.18, p = 0.024) and change in pain due to physiotherapy (PGIC: rS = −0.22, p = 0.004; CGIC: rS = −0.31, p < 0.001). The logistic regression model revealed a significant influence of the patients’ education level and the number of problems on the PGIC and the CGIC. Conclusions: The addition of at least one GPC scale might be valuable in evaluating the outcome in physical therapy, which requires little time and thus may be ideal for a clinical setting. Patients’ and therapists’ perception of change is significantly influenced by the patients’ education level and the number of problems, which might be of relevance when choosing adequate treatment strategies.


Chiropractic & Manual Therapies | 2017

ECU convention 2017 research presentations

Alice Kongsted; Lise Hestbaek; Carlo Ammendolia; Pierre Côté; Danielle Southerst; Michael Schneider; Brian Budgell; Claire Bombardier; Gillian Hawker; Y. Raja Rampersaud; Corinne Minder; Cynthia K. Peterson; Halldór Fannar Gíslason; Jari Kullervo Salminen; Linn Sandhaugen; Andreas Stenseth Storbråten; Renske Versloot; Inger Rouge; Dave Newell; Ellen Aartun; Hainan Yu; Erik Poulsen; G.H. Gonçalves; Ewa M. Roos; Jonas Bloch Thorlund; Carsten Bogh Juhl; Andreas Eklund; Irene Jensen; Malin Lohela-Karlsson; Jan Hagberg

O-01 Care seeking patterns during one year after visiting a chiropractor Alice Kongsted, Lise Hestbaek Nordic Institute of Chiropractic and Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern Denmark, 5230 Odense M, Denmark; Department of Sports Science and Clinical Biomechanics, University of Southern Denmark, 5230 Odense M, Denmark Correspondence: Alice Kongsted ([email protected]) Chiropractic & Manual Therapies 2017, 25(Suppl 1):O-01

Collaboration


Dive into the Brigitte Wirth's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Corina Schuster-Amft

Bern University of Applied Sciences

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge